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Methodology, Method and Variables

Environmental Science
StudyPulse

Methodology, Method and Variables

Environmental Science
01 May 2026

Methodology, Method and Variables in Scientific Investigations

Understanding the distinction between methodology (the overall approach) and method (the specific procedures), and correctly identifying and controlling variables, is fundamental to designing a valid scientific investigation.

Methodology vs. Method

Term Definition Example
Methodology The general philosophical and strategic approach to the investigation Fieldwork
Method The specific, detailed, replicable procedure used within that methodology ‘Place five 1×1 m quadrats randomly within each habitat type; count and identify all plant species within each quadrat’

Analogy: Methodology is the style of cooking (e.g. baking); method is the specific recipe.

Choosing an Appropriate Methodology

Match the methodology to the research question:

If you want to… Use this methodology
Establish a cause–effect relationship Controlled experiment (manipulate one variable)
Measure biodiversity in natural settings Fieldwork
Understand a real-world management scenario in depth Case study
Identify patterns in existing data Correlational study
Simulate or predict outcomes Modelling
Synthesise what is already known Literature review

Characteristics of Good Methodology

  • Appropriate to the research question: Fieldwork is not appropriate for testing a single controlled variable; a controlled lab experiment is not appropriate for measuring landscape-scale biodiversity
  • Generates primary data: Must involve original data collection by the student
  • Reproducible: Another researcher could follow the same approach and obtain comparable results
  • Feasible: Achievable with available equipment, time and resources

Variables

Independent Variable (IV)

  • The variable deliberately manipulated by the researcher
  • Changed in a systematic, controlled way
  • VCAA requires that the IV be clearly stated and operationally defined

Example: Distance from urban centre (0–1 km, 1–5 km, 5–10 km, >10 km from CBD)

Common error: Having multiple IVs in one investigation — this makes it impossible to attribute observed effects to a single cause. One IV per investigation.

Dependent Variable (DV)

  • The variable measured to assess the effect of the IV
  • The ‘outcome’ variable
  • Should be measurable with the instruments available

Example: Simpson’s Index of Diversity of plant species within each distance zone

Controlled Variables (CVs)

  • Variables that could affect the DV but are kept constant to prevent confounding
  • Identifying appropriate CVs demonstrates understanding of what other factors influence the DV

Example for a biodiversity survey across urban gradient:
- Controlled: quadrat size (1×1 m), time of year of survey (October–November), total sampling area per zone (5 quadrats × 1 m² = 5 m²), observer experience

Potential extraneous (uncontrolled) variables:
- Weather on survey day (rain vs. sun affects plant detection)
- Soil type (may vary independently of distance)
- Elevation (affects plant species)

Appropriateness Criteria

When justifying your variable choices in a report:

Variable What to Justify
IV Why this variable is the logical predictor of the DV; why this range was chosen
DV Why this measure captures what you want to know; how it is operationally defined
CVs Why these variables could influence the DV if not controlled

Linking IV, DV and Hypothesis

These three elements must be internally consistent:

Element Example
Research question Does habitat fragmentation reduce bird species diversity?
IV Patch size (isolated vegetation patches of 0.1, 0.5, 2, 5 ha)
DV Simpson’s Index of Diversity of bird species (measured via point counts)
Hypothesis Larger vegetation patches will have higher SID, because they support greater habitat heterogeneity and are less affected by edge effects
CVs Survey method (5-min point count at patch centre); season; time of day; observer

EXAM TIP: VCAA investigation design questions frequently ask students to identify the IV, DV and two CVs. Responses that define each clearly in the context of the specific investigation score highest. A common error is listing ‘the experiment’ as a controlled variable — CVs are specific measurable factors, not the general procedure.

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